Gainesville news. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1902-1955, December 27, 1922, Image 2

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THE NEWS, GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA r - WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 192! Messrs. Alton and John, Hoscb, Jr., of tho University, aro the guests of their parents, Mr, and Mrs. J. If. Ilosch, for the Christmas Holidays. Writer Aeserte Cause Is Natural Crav. ing for Moat Where There Ic a Scant Supply. Official Organ City of Gainesville Watered at Gainesville, Georgia. Post- office as second class mail matter. Pigs from 6 weeks enough to kill. x&h't buy scrubs when “Country Life,” thinks that the cause you can buy s* good bred pigs as can is constant craving for meat In m land be found for less money: I ALWAYS "^ mostly grain abounds. He tells , ' o . - , some interesting things about the ex- tavo tta. See ».,»» before b»„» 5 , th , native, o( the if you wont tho best, and save money, jjahr j^ouk hi Africa. Pigs at daily, Corner W; Washington When they Inhabit a stocWess area, .and Rainey Sts., Gainesville. l-3p he says, they go for months without Phone 268. E. A. BARNHART. except of course for an occa- Eetablished 1888. Published Wednesdays Snbscription $1.50 per Annum A. 8. HARDY, - Editor and Publisher News Bldg. 38 Main St. Phone 159 label on yonr paper shows to what date yonr subscription is paid. If it is incorrect, you should notify this office • REAL ESTATE LOANS 6 per cent money. Under Bankers deserve System 6 per cent loans may be secured on City or farm property to ' vy, build, improve, or pay indebted- pany, 1648 California, street, Denver, ces3/ Bankers Reserve Deposit Com- THE NEWS, GAINESVILLE, GEOR GIA, WEDNESDAY, DEO. 6; 1922. After this date, the minimum ehargo lor Cards of Thanks will be 50c, pay able. When presented for publication. GAINESVILLE, GA., DEC. 27, 1922. We wish to express to our policy holders and friends our sincere ap preciation for the liberal patronage we have enjoyed during the past, and to wish for them all that is good during the New Year. most unlimited meat, as they do have when they kill an elephant or a hippo potamus, they simply gorge them selves.' A man will eat from fifteen to .twenty pounds in twenty-four hours.. All night long he will eat and doze and doze again. As a result 'his skin turns a peculiar dull color, and his eyes be come yellow. On the third day he has completely recovered his natural ap pearance and is again full of energy. Mr. Marcus Waterman, who is at tending school at Tech, iS\ tho guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. U. R. Wat erman. REAL ESTATE LOANS 6 -per cent money. Under Bankers' Reserve System 6 per cent loans may bo secured on city or farm property to buy, build* improve, or pay indebted ness. Bankers' Reserve ;Deposit Com pany, 1648 California street, Denver, Colorado. '' „ 1-17-23. In a, short time he wants his grain food again and if he has the choice will eat a large portion of grain to a small portion of meat. If,; as with the.'elephant, there is much fat with the meat, the natives are likely to become extremely fit on that , diet. For example, for sixty- tbree days of consecutive marching a kUangozi, or bead porter, of mine who was of slight build, carried his mat, his blanket, fifteen pounds of rations and a tusk that weighed one hundred, and forty-eight pounds! The shortest day was five hours,; and Some days were very long indeed. For rations throughout the march he had two pounds of native grain every day and as much meat and elephant fut as he cared,for, His physical condition was magnificent throughout.—From, the Youth’s Companion, v .1 ' Midshipman ‘ Russell ^Truslow, wjto is at Annapolis; is spending the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Truslpw. Mr. Pifman tCarter is the guest of his parents during the Holidays. Mr. Carter hnV been attending school at T. M. I. during the Fall. ■> ,,, . # * • * * Mr. Linton Carter, a student of Gems fcla Tech is at fiome for the-Holidays as the fruofst of liis parents, Mr. and Mrs. 0. A. Carter, ' \ We are in better position than ever to take care of your Insurance and Bond needs, and solicit a continu- Wood That Will Not Float. Circassian walnut Is heavier than water and will not float. REMO V AL N0 TIC E I have moved my office to. the Bailey House, corner Washington and Green Sts, second floor. W.. J. CARTER,' M. 0. Specialist in Riggs Disease and Prophylaxis y ance of your business. Mrs. J. E. Davis had as her guests ‘during the holidays Mr. and; Mrs. J.-U. Duckett of Atlanta. The, latter wps for merly Miss Hazel Virginia Davis. LAMENTS CHANGE IN FASHION FOUND: A' package nlaeedMn ear throtigh mistake. Owner may have same by describing contents and paying for this ad. Call ?08-J. , Captain Dingle Says Paris Dress . • Craze Has Hit South Sea Island Femininity, Too. , HOT DOGS, ALL KINDS OF SAND WICHES, FRUITS AND ICE COLD BRINKS—^AT 0. A. DOBBS’ PLACE. BEER ON DRAUHT. Bill Wofford PROPRIETOR. FOR QUICK SALE: 4-room ,house, electric lights, modern conveniences, in citv linv’ts on'Green Street Circle, lot 83x200, bam. good garden, all fenced in. A bargain for quick sale. Terms to suit. • 1-3 E. P. LEDFORD. Cgpt. Charles Dingle of the freight er Bay Port, which arrived in Port Newark from Hawaii and the South Sea islands, brought a" dismal tale of the ravages of fashion in those once guileless' and innocent regions. It’s the Paris-born craze for iong skirts, says Cap’n Dingle and Ids crew, that has sophisticated the spicy isles. “They're wealin’ them straw dresses all right,” explained Skip Slattery, first assistant chief engineer of the “but they’re weariu’ ’em Incorporated 408-9-10 Jackson Bdg. Phone 319 or 61G freighter, like a b ine bottle useta be—from neck to heels, you might say. Then they •got a new-styie petticoat made o’ moss. Oh, it ain’t like what it used to be!" Even Lucky Bill Fanning, optlmiat that he is, joined in the threnody. It was enough to make an old-time sail- orman shed tears, lie said, to see the girls ail wadded up in straw and'moss like that. ) Why, he could remember when putting in at some of those is lands was better than a Fourteenth street burlesque, but now it was duller than Teaneck. Be a Doctor of Chiropractic and earn from FIVE TO FIFTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS per annum. We have a most ideal location in the South in a Citv and suburbs of almost FOUR HUNDRED THOUSAND population. YOUR CHANCE TO EARN While You LEARN. r ‘ * -■ . . We are offering our $500.00 three year course including X-RAA Instruction and Practice‘to be given in 18 months for $250.00 each, if you enroll on or "before Jan. 1st, 1923. .Only one student accepted from each county at this fee. Winter semester opens Jan. 2nd, 1923. Write at. once for new annual catalogue. SOUTHERN. COLLEGE OF CHIROPRACTIC, INC; Chamber of Commerce Bldg. Atlanta, Georgia From the Whole Flock Optometrist I can tell you if your need is Glasses. Modem equipment for proper examination. It will pay you to get the facts about your eyes. W. R. Hughes Jeweler &Optometrist Jackson Bldg. Gainesville, Ga. WE know some folks who look upon it as a regular event for their hens to stop laying during the winter. Just when eggs are worth the most, their Socks aren’t pro ducing enough to pay the feed bill. GET MORE EGGS NOW You can- get eggs right through the winter if you feed right. You must give a hen all the elements that make eggs. Use Purina Hen Chow and Chicken Chowder on the positive guarantee of More Eggs or Money Ba$k Ask for the Checkerboard Bag -New Yfirk Tribune. Lost Would be Irreparable There Is much curiosity and anxiety to know what has become of the famous Codex Slnaiticus, which was, before the Russian revolution, in thq Imperial library at Fetrograd. This most ancient manuscript of the Blblo was discovered in the monastery of St Catherin, on Mount Sinai, Whence-its name, and was acquired by Tsar Alex ander H in 1809. What has become of this precious document during the Rus sian revolution? More than the loss of the jewels of the last Russian dynasty its destruc tion would be an irreparable act, even though there Is another similar, docu ment-known as the “Vaticanus,” an uncial manuscript of the Fourth cen tury, found by Tischendorf in 1844 in the.samW monastery. Efficient Banking r Service! mils Bank offers you every courtesy and all accom modation consistent with sound banking. We coydia solicit your accounts, large or small. State Banking Company Capital and Surplus $105,000.00 T. E. ATKINS, Pres. W. R. WINBURN, Cashier We carry a complete line of Dry Goods, Guaranteed All Leather Shoes, Hats, Clothing, Ladies’ and Children’s Ready-toWear. Come and see o,ur value# before you buy. J. H. Goldstein, Mgr. 7e sell for Cash and Sell f,or Le3S> StoW, Belfe& Co Economio Error. New Jersey’s forests are being burned up at the rate of 70,000 acres a year, which means not only that her area of growing forests Is being re duced annually to that extent, but that land which should become a pub lic asset of great value is telnig con verted Into a public liability of un- • sightly and embarrassing proportions. / There are 2,000,000 acres of forest J lnnd in New Jersey almost within trucking distance of the greatest 'lum- her market in the world, according to the estimate of the Americun Foies try association, which offers the opinion that sooner or later the people of the state of New Jersey will awaken to the economic significance of the fact, but that the awakening may, come too late.—Thrift Magazine. <sciwr»/K») Funeral Directors and Embalmers 1 Open Day and Night « ■ | Phone 224 45 S. Main St. | J.D.HARDIE GAINESVILLE, GA. 6 25 N. Bradford St MEN WANTE D jTor cuttmg; timber and some with teams for logging; come ready for work; long job. R. Kewitz, R. 2 Dahlonega, or W. B. Loggins. INSURANCE 2nd Floor Jaokson Building No. 216-17 ' - Our Companies do the big gest business in Georgia WHY?? When Merchant* Coined Own Money. The action of the German govern ment In allowing certain firms to print their own money In small denomlna- tlonsM'ecalls a somewhat similar state of affairs in the early years of George JJI in England. / In those days the amount of/copper coin In circulation was inadequate, and tradesmen all over the country Issued tokens of their own which at tained almost equal standing with the regal coinage. One manufacturer iu Birmingham Issued over 0,000,000 pen nies and 3,500,000 half-pennies In the course of a few years and the amount of “tokens” 1b circulation In 1780 outnumbered tbe genuine coinage. Fordson Lincoln till UMI VfiH# Ah CA* Cars, 7 rucks, Tractors Parts and Service Bums Motor Co. Gainesville, Georgia The Higher Immorality From un Exchange—There is only one way to get ready for immorality, and that is to live this life bravely and cheerfully as we can.—Boston Trunscrlpt. Intricate Piece of Machinery. A watch is comparatively a simple machine, containing an average of about J50 distinct parts. However, by actual count It has been found that the production of these parts require ever 2,700 separate operations. &|| The “Wall” Storage Batteries aro made in Gainesville, Ga., and guaranteed by the manufacturers. It wi'Ji pay you to get my pries before you buy another Storage piattery. v WALL’S BATTERY AND TIRE SHOP Cor. College Ave. and Athens St. i